with him and figure it out like partners. But I didn’t, I knew
that would piss him off. I sometimes wonder if that is at the
root of his distaste for me: He’s let me see his
shortcomings, and he hates me for knowing them.
He shoved me. Hard. Two days ago, he shoved me,
and I fell and banged my head
against the kitchen island
and I couldn’t see for three seconds. I don’t really know
what to say about it. It was more shocking than painful. I
was telling him I could get a job, something freelance, so
we could start a family, have a real life …
‘What do you call this?’ he said.
Purgatory
, I thought. I stayed silent.
‘What do you call this, Amy? Huh?
What do you call
this? This isn’t life, according to Miss Amazing?’
‘It’s not
my
idea of life,’ I said, and he took three big
steps toward me, and I thought:
He looks like he’s going to
… And then he was slamming against me and I was falling.
We both gasped. He held his fist in the other hand and
looked like he might cry. He was beyond sorry, he was
aghast. But here’s the thing I want to be clear on: I knew
what I was doing, I was punching every button on him. I was
watching him coil tighter and tighter – I wanted him to finally
say
something,
do
something. Even if it’s bad, even if it’s
the worst,
do something, Nick
. Don’t leave me here like a
ghost.
I just didn’t realize he was going to do
that
.
I’ve never considered what
I would do if my husband
attacked me, because I haven’t exactly run in the wife-
beating crowd. (I know, Lifetime movie, I know: Violence
crosses all socioeconomic barriers. But still: Nick?) I sound
glib. It just seems so incredibly ludicrous: I am a battered
wife.
Amazing Amy and the Domestic Abuser
.
He did apologize profusely. (Does anyone do anything
profusely
except apologize? Sweat, I guess.) He’s agreed
to consider counseling, which was something I never
thought could happen. Which is good. He’s
such a good
man, at his core, that I am willing to write it off, to believe it
truly was a sick anomaly, brought on by the strain we’re
both under. I forget sometimes, that as much stress as I
feel, Nick feels it too: He bears the burden of having
brought me here, he feels the strain of wanting mopey me
to
be content, and for a man like Nick – who believes
strongly in an up-by-the-bootstraps sort of happiness – that
can be infuriating.
So the hard shove, so quick, then done, it didn’t scare
me in itself. What scared me was the look on his face as I
lay on the floor blinking, my head ringing. It was the look on
his face as he restrained himself from taking another jab.
How much he wanted to shove me again. How hard it was
not to. How he’s been looking at me since: guilt, and
disgust at the guilt. Absolute disgust.
Here’s the darkest part. I drove out to the mall
yesterday, where about half the town buys drugs, and it’s as
easy as picking up a prescription; I know because Noelle
told me: Her husband goes there to purchase the
occasional joint. I didn’t want a joint, though, I wanted a gun,
just in case. In case things with Nick go really wrong. I didn’t
realize until I was almost there that it was Valentine’s Day. It
was Valentine’s Day and I was going to buy a gun and then
cook my husband dinner. And I thought to myself:
Nick’s
dad was right about you. You are a dumb bitch. Because
if you think your husband is going to hurt you, you
leave.
And yet you can’t leave your husband, who’s mourning his
dead mother. You can’t. You’d have to be a bibilically
awful woman to do that
, unless
something were truly wrong.
You’d have to really believe your husband was going to
hurt you
.
But I don’t really think Nick would hurt me.
I just would feel safer with a gun.